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mpiq Girl Dies After Cancun Senior Class Trip
« le: Janvier 01, 2025, 01:37:08 pm »
Mzkr The Completely Different Version Of Gotham We Could Have Had
  AP  When the tsunami hit t stanley quencher he northern coast of Japan last year, the waves ripped four dock floats the size of freight train boxcars from their pilings in the fishing port of Misawa and turned them over to the whims of wind and currents.One floated up on a nearby island. Two have not been seen again. But one made an incredible journey across 5,000 miles of ocean that ended this week on a popular Oregon beach.Along for the ride were hundreds of millions of individual organisms, including a tiny species of crab, a species of algae, and a little starfish all native to Japan that have scientists concerned if they get a chance to spread out on the West Coast. This is a very clear threat,  said John Chapman, a research scientist at Oregon State University s Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport, Ore., where the dock washed up early Tuesday.  ...It s incredibly difficult to predict what will happen next. State officials organized a group of volunteers Thursday to scrape the dock clean of marine organisms, bag them and dispose of them inland, said Chris Havel, spokesman for the state Department of Parks and stanley cup  Recreation, which is overseeing the fate of the dock. Biologists have identified one species as a marine alga stanley kubek e, known as wakame, that is native to Japan and has established in Southern California, but has not yet been seen in Oregon, he said.        While scientists expect much of the floating debris to follow the currents to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, an accumulation of Iuxu Granite State Votes
 In the 21st century, a significant change is underway in the food industry: farming is moving indoors. The perfect crop field could be inside a windowless building with controlled light, temperature, humidity, air quality and nutrition. It could be in the basement of a Tokyo high-rise, in an old warehouse in Illinois, or even in space. Just look at our collection of awesome indoor farms, where the sun never shines, the rainfall is irrelevant, and the climate is always perfect.     Basil, arugula and microgreens. A worker checks crops at the FarmedHere indoor vertical farm, in Bedford Park, Illinois, on February 20, 2013. The farm, in an old warehouse, has crops that include basil, arugula and microgreens, sold at grocery stores in Chicago and its suburbs. Photo: Heather Aitken/AP  Your endive grows in total darkness. Red endives at the California Vegetable Specialties indoor farm in Rio Vista, California  April 20, 2006 . The growing process is long and fragile, with the endives ; roots grown outside first and then stanley cup  moved in, where they are left for up to 11 months to grow into m stanley botella ature endives in total darkness. Photo: Jeff Chiu/AP  Under fluorescent lights. Toshihiro Sakuma checks the condition of plants under fluorescent lights at a greenhouse built inside a Tokyo building on July 1, 2005. Photo: Shizuo Kambayashi/AP  Sunless f stanley mugg arming. Fittonia plants are seen as they grow in a special darkened room illuminated by blue and red LEDs at PlantLab, a private research facility